• _sideffect@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    So you want no one to work? What do you think will happen to the world if everyone stops working?

    • Pizkellate@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Not sure if this is the original intent, but I personally see it as not requiring individuals to work a standard work week to survive. None of this nuance is here so I can’t say for sure, but those wanting a minimal life can spend time on skills development, personal endeavours, teaching, volunteering*, occasional gig work, or just vibing with little and being content with getting by.

      Those who want more than getting by, which I can only speculate is a lot of people, and those driven to work, can work. The value proposition of work would change drastically, though, as value for types of labour change drastically.

      Right now, many of the most well paid jobs are the cushiest. People want them not just because they are the highest paid with best benefits, but because they are low physical labour, flexible, “clean”. Meanwhile the jobs people argue nobody would do - customer service, waste management, line work (which very well might be mostly replaced with automation in the next 20 years) - the incentive would need to be way higher because now you aren’t working it to live, you’re working it to live better.

      I know it isn’t apples to apples by any stretch, but some of the biggest software used today was made by volunteers working alongside their jobs. A huge part of university teaching is done by contractors with terrible wages and precarious conditions because they just love teaching (and of course other pretty awful reasons for many).

      A combination of flipping to worker owned co-operatives to minimize administrative/BS-job waste and give labourers ownership over their labour to keep them invested, alongside a minimum income and regulations to flip wages so that the less desirable the job, the higher the financial incentive, forcing companies to actually cut waste and reduce excess production because labour won’t be as ubiquitous, firm regulations to prevent mass wealth accumulation and ensure fair wealth distribution among labourers and allocate funds to industries that meet basic human needs, and embracing automation rather than rejecting it to make up the labour shortage.

      All this said - I have no idea if this will work out positively, highly doubtful it could happen at a large scale, recognize there is likely 1000 holes here and new problems to arise, and don’t fully believe it’s feasible nor that I’m remotely intelligent enough to claim this has any real grounding. Speculative, hopeful, a worthwhile thought experiment to mine for ideas, a place to avoid black-and-white thinking on issues like a 0 hour workweek.

      Edit: oh yeah, I asterisked volunteering because many of the volunteer efforts we have now are really extremely valuable for survival and I can’t imagine what we see as volunteering now would still be freely provided labour, but I have no ideas what industries would and wouldn’t be volunteer driven (I mean, we likely didn’t anticipate the biggest and most ubiquitous software projects being entirely volunteer based)

      • onoira [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 months ago

        good post. two notes:

        Not sure if this is the original intent, but I personally see it as not requiring individuals to work a standard work week to survive.

        that is what antiwork — and thus the meaning of this community — is: the critique of work, where work refers to wage labour and performative toil, as this wholly separate sphere of/from life, and its origins as a system of control, and the psychological, physical and environmental harms it brings. it is not against labour conceptually; it is fundamentally anticapitalist.

        this community has a way of ragebaiting bad faith, law-and-order liberals browsing All; who don’t read the sidebar, who have fully internalised the Protestant work ethic, and who think ‘work’ refers to both ‘all labour’ and ‘wage labour’, and who think dispossession and wage labour are necessary to prevent everyone from getting depression or turning into Fallout raiders.

        All this said - I have no idea if this will work out positively, highly doubtful it could happen at a large scale, recognize there is likely 1000 holes here and new problems to arise, and don’t fully believe it’s feasible nor that I’m remotely intelligent enough to claim this has any real grounding.

        political imaginaries don’t need to be completely fleshed out ten steps in advance. it’s enough just to identify a problem. it’s more than enough to start imagining the first steps to solving those problems. you don’t need anyone’s permission to imagine.

        the implementation details are not important at an abstract level. those would reveal themselves as a natural consequence of implementation, and the details would be unique to every social and cultural environment.

        • Pizkellate@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I’m a professor so I caveat quite a bit when I’m outside my domain out of habit, I appreciate the notes here and definitely see how folks could come in with highly skewed perspectives against what’s possible or what’s meant there. The terms here help, thank you!

        • platypus_plumba@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Alright, I see what you don’t want as a community, but what do you want then?

          Let’s assume for a moment that nobody has to work, so my guess is that most people won’t work. How is that society designed? I’m not saying it isn’t possible, I personally can’t imagine it… mainly because I have never put too much thought into the matter. But I see you have, so I’m curious to learn how you imagine that society.

      • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What are some of the biggest software that we use today that was produced for free?

        Do you mean FOSS? Where is that used as a top contender?

        • onoira [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          7 months ago

          Linux powers the majority of servers, supercomputers and embeddeds. Apache HTTP Server and nginx power over 70% of websites, and used to account for almost 100% of all web servers. PHP is used by 80% of websites. MySQL is most likely the datastore for those websites. Git, Subversion, and Mercurial make up the majority of version control systems used for software and research. Python is the language of choice for machine learning and other data sciences. chances are that most websites you connect to via HTTPS are using OpenSSL. Hadoop and Kubernetes powers ‘big data’. core protocols like DNS, HTTP, SMTP, TCP/IP were developed as FLOSS. in their respective industries, there’s also Android, Audacity, Blender, Firefox, GIMP, InkScape, Krita…

          i’m going to preëmpt your use of the word ‘free’ here. all of this required a great deal of time, effort and infrastructure. developers still need to eat, and that means the money came from somewhere. it is ‘free’ in the sense that: it is given, not sold; that it was a collaborative volunteer effort; and that you can do whatever you want with it. just because some developers receive some sort of compensation — or work a dayjob and have to survive in a capitalist system — does not mean we need fixed-schedule, ass-in-seats, top-down hostage wage labour to accomplish anything valuable at scale.

          • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Sure, Linux is used in super computers, but there’s only around 500 of them.

            Linux only has around 4% install base compared to Windows.

            And I disagree on the not needing ass in seats metaphor you used; plenty of people who create FOSS do so because of a need/desire, yes, but also because that knowledge helps them make money afterwards.

            Would you work your whole life to just create FOSS?

            Making free software is a means to an end, and that end means recognition and eventually a well paying job.

            • onoira [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              7 months ago

              Would you work your whole life to just create FOSS?

              yes, if it has social value and brings meaning to my life.

              you can drop the word ‘just’: i wouldn’t just do any one thing, and neither would most people if given the opportunity to do more than just their 9 to 5.

              there is more to life than feeding the mute compulsion for private wealth and fame. the driving force of most people is to be comfortable and to belong, and the two are intertwined. in our current society, private wealth and fame are the path to comfort (it’s debateable whether the wealthy have any sense of ‘belonging’).

              a lot of people really do want to do things just for the joy or intellectual stimulation of doing it, and to do so without having the joy sucked out of it by economic imperatives enforced from on high by a nepotic sadomasochist in a suit. there is nothing more humiliating than being forced to play a game you had no part in making, that you can’t say say no to, and that exists only as a form of power imposed on you.

              • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I agree that most of us are used and abused by the rich pricks, it’s why I joined this community in the first place.

                But it’s taken to an aburd extreme here where it seems people want to live a care free happy life without burdens, yet at the same time expect life to continue as it currently is with all the benefits we all receive.

                Fact is, it won’t. If people don’t bust their ass, and get paid well for it, most would not do anything of value (I know you said you would work for free, but you’re a very very small minority).

            • dragnet@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              7 months ago

              Linux only has around 4% install base compared to Windows.

              So you’re including supercomputers and desktops. What about servers and embedded devices? No kernel is more ubiquitous than Linux.

                • dragnet@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  7 months ago

                  Go ahead and Google server OS market share. Educate yourself, I’m not interested in arguing with someone who isn’t interested in reality over winning an argument. Sincerely, fuck off.

        • Croquette
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          7 months ago

          Nodejs is a great example of FOSS and a good part of the modern internet is built on that.

          Linux as well. You can pay for support, but the software itself is FOSS. It might not have a big share of desktop use, but it’s a mainstay on servers.

            • Croquette
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              7 months ago

              That’s the thing though, you don’t have to pay, but you have the option on certain distro to have a professional support for your business.

    • 9tr6gyp3@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      People can finally work on things that interest them! No more corporate overlords telling you what to produce.

        • 9tr6gyp3@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Too bad we don’t have any millionaire toilet cleaners or garbage collectors, even though we NEED them.

          • null@slrpnk.net
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            7 months ago

            But that’s an entirely different premise than “nobody needs to work”…

            • 9tr6gyp3@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Who said “nobody needs to work”?

              The actual premise is that your labor shouldn’t be exploited to produce products for the sole purpose of producing products, which make a few people rich while you get nothing. If we’re working to keep necessary services functioning, thats a different story. We can all do that as a society without a business/corporation telling us to do it.

        • jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          I guess if nobody wants to do it, the market would have to price that labor much higher to make that happen due to a low supply for a high demand service.

          • platypus_plumba@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            The problem is that companies have more leverage than individuals. How many minimum wage protests have we seen over the years, and they are still getting paid for that. A company is probably going to find someone desperate enough to fill any gap. A person needs to survive, and without an income they become desperate enough to fill any gap.

            Usually people with high salaries can bargain and use leverage because they aren’t desperate to get a job to survive.

            • jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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              7 months ago

              But that’s what these antiwork posts are about. If people weren’t desperate to survive a lot of problems would sort themselves out.

    • onoira [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      everyone would have more time to support each other, pursue their interests, and do other things that really matter.

      don’t conflate ‘work’ with ‘labour’ or ‘doing literally anything’.

      • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Um… You wouldn’t be able to enjoy anything, you know that right?

        Your electricity? Wouldn’t work. Your water? Would stop functioning or be poisoned within a week. Uber eats? Lmao, forget about it.

        EVERYTHING would grind to a halt.

        • Lesrid@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Ive only ever used Uber Eats while working. Without work I’d have more time for gardening

        • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I don’t know why you are being downvoted - the world doesn’t magically turn over from volunteering.

          • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Seems people don’t understand how the world works and instead believe in a fantasy bubble world where everything works as it currently does with no one needing to bust their ass.

        • onoira [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          7 months ago

          Uber eats

          oh no! my treats! /s

          so, if people don’t have the conditions of life held hostage by labour-buyers, the world would end? …why would the water be poisoned? what did i say about conflating ‘work’ with ‘labour’ or ‘doing literally anything [at all]’?

          there would still be people who want to operate public utilities[0]. there would still be electricians. and plumbers. and what about microgrids?

          this also wouldn’t happen overnight, which you make it sound like it would. or is this like when someone suggests phasing out fossil fuels? and some lemmy.world username says ‘if we suddenly abruptly instantly instantaneously directly rapidly CTRL+A-CTRL+X’d all oil in the world right now it’d be just like in the Mad Max!’

          less than 27% of paid labour is serving real needs[1]. there is a lot of shit that we don’t need, that provides no social value, and that we could do without[2]. the individualist ratrace separates us from our communities, which are perfectly capable of taking care of us, even and *especially* in a crisis[3],[4],[5]. a managerial class is not necessary to operate public utilities[6].

          if people want electricity, or running water, they will arrange for it. if absolutely nobody in the community knows how, they find someone who does and they make a deal.

          most ‘work’ would probably be automated. automation is really more viable in a postcapitalist setting because there is no profit incentive getting in the way of the time for innovation to make reliable, longevous systems that aren’t intentionally cheap and intended to break within 2 – 5 years.

          so, i don’t really see how ‘EVERYTHING would grind to a halt’ unless ‘EVERYTHING’ is ‘precisely the way things are now in whatever the present moment is’.

        • jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          How is Uber Eats up in there next to electricity and water?

      • _sideffect@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Lmao, brilliant video!

        And yeah, it’s exactly what will happen if op gets their way

  • Gemini24601@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    That’s what you think you want, but sooner or later you’d be bored out of your mind